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Xiongning's Letter to Dr. Yunus

Miss Xiong Ning, 1978 to Mar 10, 2008, died in a traffic accident on her way to Qinghai to help the poor people there. Below is the translation of a draft letter in Chinese that she wrote to Professor Yunus, which was found among the belongings she left behind.)

Xiongning's Letter to the Nobel Peace Prize Winner Yunus

Dear Professor Muhammad Yunus,

Hello, how are you? First please forgive me if I take the liberty of writing this letter to you. I am a Chinese girl, named Xiongning, 29 years old this year, and born in an ordinary city intellectual family. Since I was young, I have had an ideal that I will set up the same “social conscience-oriented enterprise” as you advocated in Banker to the Poor.


 
Can Yunus create a poverty free world?
Daily Star ::  Can Yunus create a poverty free world?
Gaziul Hasan Khan looks at the options in the Nobel laureate's new book
 
Published On: 2008-05-10

Creating a World Without Poverty
- Muhammad Yunus
Subarna
Nobel Peace laureate Professor Muhammad Yunus, a pioneer of collateral free small credit to poor women, is in quest of harnessing free market power to solve the problems of poverty, hunger and inequality across the world. Grameen Bank, which he founded more than three decades ago to reach collateral free credit to the target group at their doorstep, has been replicated in all the continents to benefit over 100 million families. But he remains far from satisfied as poverty, hunger and inequality continue to trouble the world as well as his native Bangladesh. If the dynamics of capitalism could be applied properly, he believes, poverty, the greatest challenge, facing mankind, could be tackled to a great extent.
 
Guardian :: Solving the food crisis

Guardian Unlimited :: Solving the food crisis

A comprehensive global plan is needed to tackle the high cost of food that threatens the lives of the world's poorest and most vulnerable people

May 16, 2008 6:00 PM

The global food crisis is a dire reality for millions of the world's poor and a major test for the international community. Sustained, generous, wise leadership and broad-based cooperation is required to overcome the crisis and save lives.

Rising food prices have created tremendous pressure in the lives of poor people, for whom basic food can consume as much as two-thirds of their income.

 
Newsweek April 14th 2008

Professor Muhammad Yunus on the cover page of Newsweek as one of the world's Superclass of influential thinkers and personalities of our day.

newsweek.jpg

 

 
Professor Yunus with PM Gordon Brown
Professor Yunus discusses global food prices with PM Gordon Brown
London, April 21, 2008

 
yunus-small.jpg During a meeting at 10 Downing Street with Prime Minister Gordon Brown, Nobel Laureate Professor Muhammad Yunus  highlighted the extreme difficulties created on the poor by the global rise in prices of  essential food items. Professor Yunus  proposed a global initiative to redress the immediate pressure. Professor Yunus requested PM Gordon Brown to take leadership role  within the European community and the G-8 to initiate concerted efforts to address this issue.  He pointed out that a powerful  breakthrough is needed in  agri-technology to raise the production level in the shortest possible time.

 
Fortune Magazine

The Bangladeshi Nobel laureate wins yet another award - this time for contributions to technology. He talks to Fortune about where tech might take the poor.

By David Kirkpatrick

 

 
President Nicolas Sarkozy of France

president_sarkozy-s.jpg President Nicolas Sarkozy of France received Nobel Laureate Muhammad Yunus at Elysee Palace in Paris yesterday for a special meeting to discuss microcredit and poverty alleviation strategies for the developing world.

 

 
A New Book by Muhammad Yunus

What if you could harness the power of the free market to solve the problems of poverty, hunger, and inequality? To some, it sounds impossible. But Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus is doing exactly that. As founder of Grameen Bank, Yunus pioneered microcredit, the innovative banking program that provides poor people––mainly women––with small loans they use to launch businesses and lift their families out of poverty.

Where you can obtain copy of the book



Reviews on Creating a World Without Poverty

 
Honorary Doctor of Law degree

Honorary Doctor of Law degree from University of British Columbia

March 14, 2008

yunus_ubc_s.jpg Professor Muhammad Yunus received an honorary Doctor of Law degree in a ceremony at the University of British Columbia when he came to inaugurate the Michael Smith Nobel Lecture. Over 3000 people attended the numerous events in the day long program. The degree ceremony started with Bangladesh and Canada's national anthems, folk songs and traditional dances. Flags were also hoisted to mark the occasion.

 

 
Turns the tables on the West

Bangladeshi banker to the poor turns the tables on the West 

Vancouver Sun
March 15, 2008   by Don Cayo

turns_on_the_west.jpg It's a shop-worn cliché at best -- the white man trekking off to distant corners of the world to enlighten or enrich. The rich world's better aid and development agencies well know the best help is often to be found far from head office, and the best ideas are apt to come from staff who are plugged into the places and the cultures where they work.

But who better to turn such a dated view completely on its ear than Muhammad Yunus, the Nobel-prize-winning economist. 

 
Small Loans, Significant Impact

Small Loans, Significant Impact

After Success in Poor Nations, Grameen Bank Tries New York

   
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, March 10, 2008; Page A03

 

NEW YORK -- "Señoras!" calls the banker, summoning her borrowers to attention at their first loan-repayment meeting.

The small-business borrowers -- day-care providers, clothing sellers, jewelry makers -- crowd into the living room where their children are napping, eating cereal and watching TV.

 
Khaleej Times

Khaleej Times:  Yunus urges Bangladeshi workers to abide by rules and regulations in force in Saudi
By Habib Shaikh, Date: 28 February 2008


JEDDAH — The situation of foreigners living and working in any country other than their own is always a tough one and gets touchy depending on the situation, especially when unemployment in the host country increases and crime rate rises, not necessarily because of joblessness.

 
'Nobel rock star'

'Nobel rock star' gets standing ovations at Concordia today
Amy Dalrymple, The Forum Published Saturday, March 08, 2008

MOORHEAD - Nobel Laureate Muhammad Yunus received three standing ovations this morning from a sold-out crowd at Concordia College.

Yunus, who won the Nobel Peace Price in 2006 for founding the Grameen Bank, delivered the keynote address for the 20th annual Nobel Peace Prize Forum.

“Professor Yunus is a Nobel rock star,” Concordia President Pam Jolicoeur said in her introduction.

 
Professor Yunus visits Benin

Caption for Photograph: Professor Muhammad Yunus with President of Benin, Dr Boni Yayi.  The President ceremonially robed  Professor Yunus in national dress at the Presidential Palace on 20 February 2008Professor Yunus visited Benin on 20 February on invitation of HE Dr Boni Yayi, President of Benin. The government of Benin is launching microfinance for the poor as a national strategy and had invited Professor Yunus to visit this West African nation and share his experiences. Professor Yunus delivered a special lecture at the Palace in the presence of the President, all cabinet ministers and other top policy makers of the country. He also visited special poverty alleviation project which included a grand and colorful meeting with 5000 micro credit borrowers. At the end of his visit, Professor Yunus was decorated in the "Order of Benin" by the Grand Chancellor of Decoration in a ceremony at the Presidential Palace in Cotonou on 20th February 2008.

[Photograph: Professor Muhammad Yunus with President of Benin, Dr Boni Yayi.  The President ceremonially robed  Professor Yunus in national dress at the Presidential Palace on 20 February 2008]

 
High on Values, Low on Profits

Financial Express Mumbay
Feb 28, 2008     By RAJIV TIKO

When the Grameen Bank and French food major Danone set up Grameen-Danone Foods in early 2006 in Bangladesh, it was not a usual joint venture. Though the initial funding of $1.1 million was to be shared equally by Danone and four Grameen Companies, the venture was designed as a social business enterprise to reduce poverty by offering affordable and healthy nutrition to the poor. The venture provided for payment of 1% token dividend to investors. The Grameen Bank founder, Muhammad Yunus, has quoted the example in his latest book to illustrate his vision of tapping into businesses to solve the problem of worldwide poverty. Since he set up the Grameen Bank way back in 1983, his idea of microcredit has grown into the concept of social business. The accidental banker has unveiled it in detail in his just released book, Creating a World Without Poverty: Social Business and the Future of Capitalism. The new way of doing business has become imperative because governments, multilateral institutions and nonprofits have failed the poor,he says.

 
When the Bottom Line Is Ending Poverty

BusinessWeek

When the Bottom Line Is Ending Poverty -Creating a World Without Poverty:

Social Business and the Future of Capitalism By Muhammad Yunus

Muhammad Yunus is a humble man who would resist being compared to Mahatma Gandhi. But the two have much in common as campaigners for social progress. While Gandhi's goal was the end of colonialism, Yunus' is just as grand: He means to reform capitalism to make it a tool for ending poverty. Think of him as Gandhi with a BlackBerry (RIMM).
Yunus won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006 for his work as founder and managing director of Grameen Bank, the pioneering microcredit organization in Bangladesh. He launched Grameen 31 years ago to help poor people start businesses. Since then the microcredit movement has gone global, with copycat organizations springing up in Asia, Africa, and Latin America.

 
Muhammad Yunus: Nobel Peace Prize Winner

Business Visionaries
February 27, 2008  by David A. Andelman

Muhammad Yunus won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006 along with his Grameen Bank for pioneering the concept of micro-finance in his native Bangladesh--a financial model that has now spread across much of the Third World and intrigued large segments of the business communities of the developed world as well.
In this interview with Forbes.com Executive Editor David A. Andelman, he talks about his model, his dream and his new book-- Creating a World Without Poverty: Social Business and the Future of Capitalism, Public Affairs 2007, 261 pages, $26.

 
Subprime Lender

Wall Street Journal
March 1, 2008     By EMILY PARKER

dmy_cartoon.jpgIn a Jackson Heights shop for colorful saris and glittering bracelets, several women have gathered to meet with their banker. They laugh and chat in Bengali. Sultana, a 39-year-old woman wearing a headscarf, hands him $128 in cash. She is making her first repayment of the $3,000, six-month loan she'll use to help with her husband's candy store.
Welcome to Grameen America, Muhammad Yunus's brand-new microfinance venture. Mr. Yunus, along with his Bangladesh-originated Grameen Bank, won the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize for battling poverty by lending out small sums of money to the poor. The loans are mainly for income-generating activities -- from making baskets to raising chickens. Since its establishment in 1983, Grameen has given out billions of dollars in loans, helping to pull families out of poverty and inspiring similar operations all over the world.

 
Yunus trashes

Yunus trashes reports of crimes by Bangladeshis in Saudi Arabia 

Daily Star 27 February 2008

Nobel laureate Prof Muhammad Yunus, now on a visit to Saudi Arabia, has brushed aside allegations in Saudi media that a large number of Bangladeshis are breaking the law in the kingdom.

Any people can turn to crimes anywhere and so it is not fair to single out a certain nationality, he said during a reception hosted by Consulate General of Bangladesh at Al-Salam Holiday Inn in Jeddah Sunday evening, daily Saudi Gazette reported yesterday.

 
A Capitalist Jolt for Charity
New York Times
February 24, 2008    By STEVE LOHR
    IN the summer of 2005, Miles Gilburne and Nina Zolt had long talks over dinner in their Washington home about what to do next. For more than six years, Mr. Gilburne, a former AOL executive, and his wife, Ms. Zolt, a former lawyer, had supported a philanthropy that used books and online tools to enhance skills of inner-city students.
    The program, which Ms. Zolt directed, had been moderately successful. Students liked writing online about books and sharing their ideas with Internet pen pals, including adult mentors. Many teachers embraced the project, called In2Books, and participating students outscored their peers in standardized tests.
 
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